Tightrope walking
Tightrope walking, also called funambulism, is the skill of walking along a thin wire or rope. It has a long tradition in various countries and is commonly associated with the circus. Other skills similar to tightrope walking include slack rope walking and slacklining.
Types of rope and wire walking
- Tightwire is the skill of maintaining balance while walking along a tensioned wire between two points. It can be done either using a balancing tool or "freehand", using only one's body to maintain balance. Typically, tightwire performances either include dance or object manipulation. Object manipulation acts include a variety of props in their acts, such as clubs, rings, hats, or canes. Tightwire performers have even used wheelbarrows with passengers, ladders, and animals in their act. The technique to maintain balance is to keep the performer's centre of mass above their support point—usually their feet.
- *Highwire is a form of tight wire walking but performed at much greater height. Although there is no official height when tight wire becomes high wire, generally a wire over high will be regarded as a high wire act.
- **Skywalk is a form of highwire which is performed at great heights and length. A skywalk is performed outdoors between tall building, gorges, across waterfalls or other natural and man-made structures.
Tightrope ropes
Although in general the "lay" is the same in all of its constituent strands, the result is that the rope can twist on itself. This would be disastrous in a circus tightrope, so in that one case the rope core is usually of steel and is laid in the opposite direction to the outer layers, so the twists balance each other out.Biomechanics
Acrobats maintain their balance by positioning their centre of mass directly over their base of support, i.e. shifting most of their weight over their legs, arms, or whatever part of their body they are using to hold them up. When they are on the ground with their feet side by side, the base of support is wide in the lateral direction but narrow in the sagittal direction. In the case of highwire-walkers, their feet are parallel with each other, one foot positioned in front of the other while on the wire. Therefore, a tightwire walker's sway is side to side, their lateral support having been drastically reduced. In both cases, whether side by side or parallel, the ankle is the pivot point.A wire-walker may use a pole for balance or may stretch out his arms perpendicular to his trunk in the manner of a pole. This technique provides several advantages. It distributes mass away from the pivot point, thereby increasing the moment of inertia. This reduces angular acceleration, so a greater torque is required to rotate the performer over the wire. The result is less tipping. In addition, the performer can also correct sway by rotating the pole. This will create an equal and opposite torque on the body.
Tightwire-walkers typically perform in very thin and flexible, leather-soled slippers with a full-length suede or leather sole to protect the feet from abrasions and bruises, while still allowing the foot to curve around the wire. Though very infrequent in performance, amateur, hobbyist, or inexperienced funambulists will often walk barefoot so that the wire can be grasped between the big and second toe. This is more often done when using a rope, as the softer and silkier fibres are less taxing on the bare foot than the harder and more abrasive braided wire.
Famous tightrope artists
- Charles Blondin, a.k.a. Jean-François Gravelet, crossed the Niagara Falls many times
- Robert Cadman, early 18th-century British highwire walker and ropeslider
- Jay Cochrane, Canadian, set multiple records for skywalking, including The Great China Skywalk in Qutang Gorge, China,, from one cliff wall to the opposite side above the Yangtze River; the longest ,, in 1998, between the towers of the Flamingo Hilton in Las Vegas, Nevada, and broadcast on FOX Network's "" on Tuesday, February 23, 1999; In 2001, he became the first person to perform a , in more than a hundred years. His final performances took place during Skywalk 2012 with a world record submission of in cumulative distance skywalking from the Skylon Tower at a height of traversing the highwire to the pinnacle of the Hilton Fallsview Hotel at.
- Con Colleano, Australian, "the Wizard of the Wire"
- David Dimitri, Swiss highwire walker
- Pablo Fanque, 19th-century British tightrope walker and "rope dancer", among other talents, although best known as the first black circus owner in Britain, and for his mention in the Beatles song, Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!
- The Great Farini, a.k.a. Willie Hunt, crossed the Niagara Falls many times
- Farrell Hettig, American highwire walker, started as a Wallenda team member, once held record for steepest incline for a wire walk he completed in 1981
- Denis Josselin, a French tightrope walker, completed on 6 April 2014 a walk over the river Seine in Paris. It took him 30 minutes to walk over of rope, meters above the river. He covered his eyes halfway through without harness or safety net but police boats were on hand in case he fell.
- Jade Kindar-Martin and Didier Pasquette, an American-French highwire duo, most notable for their world-record setting skywalk over the River Thames in London
- Henri L'Estrange, 19th-century Australian; first person to tightrope walk across Sydney harbour and early balloonist
- Elvira Madigan, Danish 19th-century tightwire walker
- Bird Millman, American star of Ringling Brothers & Barnum and Bailey Circus
- :ru:Молодцов, Фёдор Фёдорович|Fyodor Molodtsov, a Russian rope walker. Was known to perform numerous tricks such as rope walking while shooting, carrying another person, wearing stilts, dancing, and even being unbalanced by pyrotechnical explosions. Known to have defeated Blondin during a tightrope crossing of the Neva river, by braving it at a wider place.
- Jorge Ojeda-Guzman, Ecuadorian highwire walker, set The Guinness Book of World Records, Tightrope Endurance Record, for living 205 days on the wire, from January 1 to July 25, 1993 in Orlando, Florida.
- Rudy Omankowski Jr., French-Czech highwire walker, holds record for skywalk distance
- Stephen Peer, after several previous successful crossings, fell to his death at the Niagara Falls in 1887
- Philippe Petit, French highwire-walker, famous for his walk between the towers of the World Trade Center in New York City in 1974
- Eskil Rønningsbakken, Norwegian balancing artist whose feats include tightrope walking between hot air balloons in flight
- Maria Spelterini, Italian highwire walker, first woman to cross the Niagara Falls
- Falko Traber, German tightwire walker, walked to the Sugarloaf Mountain in Rio de Janeiro
- Vertelli, British-Australian tightrope walker, nicknamed "the Australian Blondin"
- The Flying Wallendas, famous for their seven- and eight-person pyramid wire-walks
- Karl Wallenda, founder of the Flying Wallendas, died after falling from a wire on March 22, 1978, at age 73, while attempting to cross between the two towers of the Condado Plaza Hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
- Nik Wallenda, great-grandson of Karl, second person to walk from the United States to Canada over the Horseshoe Falls at the Niagara Falls on June 15, 2012; with his mother Delilah, completed his great-grandfather's final attempt between the two towers of the Condado Plaza Hotelon June 4, 2011. On June 23, 2013 he successfully walked over a gorge in the area of the Grand Canyon. On November 2, 2014, he crossed over the Chicago River from the west tower of Marina City to the Leo Burnett building, following it with a blindfolded trip from the west tower to the east tower of Marina City. performed a record-breaking skywalk of at Kings Island on July 4, 2008, breaking Karl Wallenda's record walk
- Adili Wuxor, Chinese, from Xinjiang, performer of the Uyghur tradition of highwire-walking called dawaz; record-holder for highest wire-walk, in 2010 he set a Guinness Book world record by living on wire for 60 days, at Beijing's Bird Nest Stadium
- Maurizio Zavatta, Holder of highest tightrope walk while blindfolded. Set on 16 November 2016 in Wulong, Chongqing.
Metaphorical use